
VRog
If you own a VR headset and have a curious kid, a grandparent, or exactly 45 minutes to spare, VRog is a charming curiosity - just don't expect it to outlast a lunch break.
Compare Prices(0 stores)
Loading prices...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Screenshots & Media

About VRog
I put on the headset, looked at a lily pad, and was a frog. That's genuinely the entire onboarding experience, and for what VRog is trying to be, it's kind of perfect. There are no controllers to fumble with, no tutorial popups, no menus demanding your attention. Your gaze is the only input - glance at a lily pad to hop, look at a bug to snatch it out of the air with your tongue. It is, by any conventional measure, threadbare. But that threadbareness is also the point. The game runs on three modes. Arcade Mode gives you 90 seconds to eat as many insects as possible and chase a leaderboard score. Survival Mode drops in a stork that hunts you between waves, escalating in speed with each level you clear, while you try to hit a score threshold before becoming dinner. Party Mode resets leaderboards every 12 hours so friends can compete on a level playing field. The insect variety adds a small layer of texture: dragonflies trigger a slow-motion window that lets you chain more catches, ladybugs flip on a night-vision filter that colour-codes the safe bugs green and the wasps red, and wasps themselves briefly scramble your aim when eaten. A chain multiplier rewards eating the same insect type consecutively. That's the full mechanical vocabulary of this game, and one reasonably attentive session covers it completely. One Steam reviewer noted they saw everything VRog has to offer in around 45 minutes, and I think that's honest rather than damning - if you go in knowing that. The pond environment is cartoony and low-poly, bright greens and blues that read clearly through a headset without causing eye strain. The audio is similarly minimal: a wet, satisfying tongue-slap when you catch something, burp sounds, bug buzzes. It's not atmospheric in any layered sense, but it suits the mood of the thing. Critics from the wider VR community have consistently flagged the content ceiling as the main issue, and they're right - there's no story, no unlockables, no reason to return once you've climbed the Survival leaderboard a few times. Where VRog genuinely shines is as a first-contact VR experience. The gaze-only control scheme means absolutely anyone can pick it up - no grip buttons to explain, no thumbsticks to calibrate. For introducing a skeptical relative to what a VR headset actually feels like, or for a calm five-minute break between longer sessions, it threads that needle quietly. It was nominated for the German Developers Award 2016 in the Best VR/AR Experience category, which tells you something about how the concept landed at the time - early VR was hungry for ideas this immediately legible. In 2025, the idea feels less novel, but the execution remains honest and functional on HTC Vive and Oculus Rift hardware. This is a game that knows exactly what it is, which I respect. It does not pretend to be a 20-hour adventure. It is a small, gentle VR sketch of pond life, built for casual curiosity rather than compulsive play. If you want something to hand to a first-time VR user and watch their face change when the tongue snaps out, VRog still does that job with quiet dignity. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7
- Memory
- 1 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Storage
- 200 MB available space
- Graphics
- NVIDIA GTX 960 / AMD Radeon R9 290 or greater
- VR Support
- SteamVR
Community Discussion
Be the first to comment on VRog.
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- ByteRockers' Games
- Publisher
- ByteRockers' Games
- Release Date
- Feb 9, 2017
